The ITAT held that remote access-based maintenance support and limited on-site visits do not constitute a Fixed Place PE or Service PE under the India-Canada DTAA.
Khush Dharmeshkumar Trivedi | May 22, 2026 |
ITAT Rejects Virtual Service PE Theory, Holds LinkedIn Profile Not Conclusive for PE Determination
Case Details
| Case Reference | ITA No. 1890/Del/2025/ AY 2022-23/ ITAT Delhi Bench “A” |
| Appellant | IMAX Theatre Services Ltd, Canada |
| Respondent | ACIT, Circle 2(1)(1), International Taxation, New Delhi |
| Date of Order | 13-May-26 |
| Outcome | Appeal ALLOWED: Addition of Rs 76,25,731 deleted in full |
Background
IMAX Theatre Services Ltd (Assessee) is a company incorporated and tax-resident in Canada holding a Valid Tax Residency Certificate as per the India-Canada DTAA. It provides maintenance services for IMAX Theatre Systems globally, including in India. For on-site maintenance at Indian customer sites, it engaged an Australian sub-contractor M/s ESPM, whose employee, Mr Sunil Kumar, visited Indian customer premises. The assessee also provided maintenance support remotely through electronic access to the theatre systems of Indian clients, limited strictly to troubleshooting, bug-fixing, and software updates.
The Assessing Officer (AO), vide order dated 24 January 2025 under Section 143(3) r.w.s. 144C (13), incorporating directions of the DRP dated 31 December 2024, held that the assessee had a Permanent Establishment (PE) in India and attributed income as follows:
Applying a profit rate of 25% under Rule 10 of the IT Rules on the total attributed income of Rs 6,10,05,848, the AO made an addition of Rs 1,52,51,462. However, the DRP reduced the profit rate to 12.5%, bringing the final addition to Rs 76,25,731
Issues Before the Tribunal
SUBMISSIONS BY PARTIES
Assessee’s Submissions
Department Submissions
ITAT RULING
The Tribunal held that all four tests for Fixed Place PE were not satisfied. The Indian customers’ theatre premises were never at the disposal of IMAX Canada. Remote access was limited, client-controlled, and served the client’s own operational interest. There was no permanence or continuity of operations at any Indian site. Accordingly, no Fixed Place PE existed under Article 5(1) of the India-Canada DTAA.
The Tribunal accepted the admitted fact that Mr Sunil Kumar’s on-site visits totalled 67 days in FY 2021-22, which is below the mandatory 90-day threshold under Article 5(2)(l). Hence, Service PE is not constituted. On the employment question, the tribunal held that the LinkedIn profile is not a deciding factor in determining his employment status when the formal affidavit from M/s ESPM was on record.
Placing reliance on Ernst & Young (EMEIA) Services Ltd vs ACIT [2026] 184 taxman.com 671 (Del. Trib.) and the Delhi High Court’s ruling in Clifford Chance Pte. Limited, 181 taxman.com 254,
The Tribunal held that Article 5(2) of the India-Canada DTAA requires the physical presence of employees within India for a Service PE. In the absence of physical presence, there can be no furnishing of services within the contracting state.
The concept of Virtual Service PE finds no mention in the India-Canada DTAA or the domestic Act. DTAAs must be interpreted strictly.
Since both Fixed Place PE and Service PE were decided in favour of the assessee, the question of profit attribution under Rule 10 did not survive.
The appeal was allowed in favour of the assessee, and the entire addition of Rs 76,25,731 was deleted.
SUMMARY
| Issue | ITAT Ruling |
| Fixed Place PE (Article 5(1)) | No PE. Remote access to client systems does not constitute a fixed place of business. None of the four tests (Place of Business, Disposal, Permanence, and Business Activity) were satisfied. |
| Service PE (Article 5(2)(l)) | No PE. On-site visits of 67 days fell below the 90-day DTAA threshold. LinkedIn profile rejected as employment proof; M/s ESPM’s affidavit accepted. |
| Virtual Service PE | Concept has no basis in the India-Canada DTAA or the domestic Act. Courts cannot judicially read in |
| Supervisory PE | No PE. No supervisory activity by the assessee in AY 2022-23, parents’ facts can be attributed. |
| Profit Attribution | PE itself did not establish that Rule 10 attribution. |
| Final Outcome | Appeal ALLOWED. Addition of Rs 76,25,731 deleted in full. |
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